From: 
Sent: Monday, January 18, 2010 6:59 PM
Subject: What You Are Not Hearing About Haiti, But Should Be

 

 


Sunday, January 17, 2010


What You Are Not Hearing About Haiti, But Should Be


 Some friends have emailed me over the last few days wondering why I have
not posted an article on the tragedy caused by the earthquake on January
12th, in Haiti. I said that I was waiting patiently until I was able to dig
through all the media hype and BS to get some factual material about Haiti,
and this tragedy. 


 

We have watched the world come forward wanting to send billions of dollars
in relief aid to Haiti since the earthquake hit near the capital, Port Of
Prince, last week. There are estimates of somewhere around 150-200 thousand
deaths from the quake, and many Haitian people are on the verge of dying
from disease, and starvation, as a result of the quake. The country is a
shambles, and relief cannot come soon enough.

 

However, are we getting the real picture of the tragedy in Haiti? Few people
are aware that Haiti itself is listed as the second poorest nation on the
planet, and that it has endured a history of extreme poverty and brutal
dictatorships throughout its history. Fewer people realize that it was the
actions of the United States itself through Haiti's history that has caused
it to be the wasteland it is today, even without this latest tragedy. 

 

For a better understanding of the real tragedy in Haiti, under the title of
What You Are Not Hearing About Haiti, But Should Be. My comments to follow:

 


What You're Not Hearing about Haiti (But Should Be)


 

2010 JANUARY 16

 

Carl Lindskoog is a New York City-based activist and historian completing a
doctoral degree at the City University of New York. You can contact him at
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

 

In the hours following Haiti's devastating earthquake, CNN, the New York
Times and other major news sources adopted a common interpretation for the
severe destruction: the 7.0 earthquake was so devastating because it struck
an urban area that was extremely over-populated and extremely poor. Houses
"built on top of each other" and constructed by the poor people themselves
made for a fragile city. And the country's many years of underdevelopment
and political turmoil made the Haitian government ill-prepared to respond to
such a disaster

 

 

True enough. But that's not the whole story. What's missing is any
explanation of why there are so many Haitians living in and around
Port-au-Prince and why so many of them are forced to survive on so little.
Indeed, even when an explanation is ventured, it is often outrageously false
such as a former U.S. diplomat's testimony on CNN that Port-au-Prince's
overpopulation was due to the fact that Haitians, like most Third World
people, know nothing of birth control.

 

It may startle news-hungry Americans to learn that these conditions the
American media correctly attributes to magnifying the impact of this
tremendous disaster were largely the product of American policies and an
American-led development model.

 

>From 1957-1971 Haitians lived under the dark shadow of "Papa Doc" Duvalier,
a brutal dictator who enjoyed U.S. backing because he was seen by Americans
as a reliable anti-Communist. After his death, Duvalier's son, Jean-Claude
"Baby Doc" became President-for-life at the age of 19 and he ruled Haiti
until he was finally overthrown in 1986. It was in the 1970s and 1980s that
Baby Doc and the United States government and business community worked
together to put Haiti and Haiti's capitol city on track to become what it
was on January 12, 2010.

 

After the coronation of Baby Doc, American planners inside and outside the
U.S. government initiated their plan to transform Haiti into the "Taiwan of
the Caribbean." This small, poor country situated conveniently close to the
United States was instructed to abandon its agricultural past and develop a
robust, export-oriented manufacturing sector. This, Duvalier and his allies
were told, was the way toward modernization and economic development.

 

>From the standpoint of the World Bank and the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) Haiti was the perfect candidate for this
neoliberal facelift. The entrenched poverty of the Haitian masses could be
used to force them into low-paying jobs sewing baseballs and assembling
other products.

 

But USAID had plans for the countryside too. Not only were Haiti's cities to
become exporting bases but so was the countryside, with Haitian agriculture
also reshaped along the lines of export-oriented, market-based production.
To accomplish this USAID, along with urban industrialists and large
landholders, worked to create agro-processing facilities, even while they
increased their practice of dumping surplus agricultural products from the
U.S. on the Haitian people.

 

This "aid" from the Americans, along with the structural changes in the
countryside predictably forced Haitian peasants who could no longer survive
to migrate to the cities, especially Port-au-Prince where the new
manufacturing jobs were supposed to be. However, when they got there they
found there weren't nearly enough manufacturing jobs go around. The city
became more and more crowded. Slum areas expanded. And to meet the housing
needs of the displaced peasants, quickly and cheaply constructed housing was
put up, sometimes placing houses right "on top of each other."

 

Before too long, however, American planners and Haitian elites decided that
perhaps their development model didn't work so well in Haiti and they
abandoned it. The consequences of these American-led changes remain,
however.

 

When on the afternoon and evening of January 12, 2010 Haiti experienced that
horrible earthquake and round after round of aftershock the destruction was,
no doubt, greatly worsened by the very real over-crowding and poverty of
Port-au-Prince and the surrounding areas. But shocked Americans can do more
than shake their heads and, with pity, make a donation. They can confront
their own country's responsibility for the conditions in Port-au-Prince that
magnified the earthquake's impact, and they can acknowledge America's role
in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development. To accept the
incomplete story of Haiti offered by CNN and the New York Times is to blame
Haitians for being the victims of a scheme that was not of their own making.
As John Milton wrote, "they who have put out the people's eyes, reproach
them of their blindness.

"

 

NTS Notes: American policies in Haiti are responsible for the state of that
nation today. This newest tragedy only magnifies the problems, and brings
new focus on how the nation got into its present state. People need the
truth about that country, and how the United States itself is responsible
for wrecking it in the first place!

 

Yes, aid is needed to help the survivors of this tragedy in Haiti. But the
real solution lies in allowing that nation to have some real meaningful
development without the "help" of the United States.

 

More to come

 

 

Posted by NTS 

 

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